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by Christine Bagley (Editor), Ang Pompano (Editor), Leslie Wheeler (Editor)
Readers root for a criminal in fiction (or in real life) for many reasons. Perhaps the criminal is fighting an injustice, or she acts impulsively and we recognize the temptation, and sometimes it's as simple as wishing we could do something like that crime and get away with it. We won't be the only one who cheers on the team in Sean Harding's "The Books Job." Many of us look to crime fiction to explore the knottier question of what is justice; several stories offer no easy answers but satisfying conclusions. The women in Gabriela Stiteler's "Money Well Spent" and in Chris Knopf's "Submission" make choices we can understand. The ranger in "As the Crows Fly" by Cheryl Malone has plenty of courage but needs something more when the line between right and wrong blurs. The reader enters more comfortable territory before realizing she's wrong. In Beth Hogan's "Willful Blindness" the situation isn't clear until the end. Bruce Robert Coffin in "Writer's Block" lets us mislead ourselves as we listen to two writers spar.
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